Thursday, March 30, 2006

Bill Virgin is All Wrong


Bill has an article about the City of Seattle's greenhouse gas reduction plan in today's PI. The article is titled City plan on cars could be a boon for suburbia and his argument is fundamentally flawed.

I am particularly glad that he mentioned "the Hubbert's Peak folks," but his main idea is founded upon an erroneous assumption: nothing will ever replace oil--there is no such thing as the magical "something else" he writes about. He should read Kenneth Deffeyes' book Beyond Oil: The View from Hubbert's Peak. Deffeyes is an oil geologist and he worked with Hubbert for years. Hubbert applied his technique to U.S. oil production and accurately predicted the peak of U.S. oil production; Deffeyes has applied the same methodology to world oil production. In his book, he examines all of the potential replacements for oil, and methodically demonstrates that they are all non-starters.

The upshot is this: oil production has either already peaked or will within just a few years, and it will never go up again. When that happens, the cost of gasoline will skyrocket, and as a society we have not worked hard enough or long enough to prepare for the consequences. Yes, people like their cars, and I agree with him that they will not voluntarily stop driving them. But when gasoline costs $12, $15, or $20 a gallon (or when there is no gasoline at all) the suburbs he (and so many others) love so much--with their widely dispersed land uses and super-low density neighborhoods--will become functionally uninhabitable.

Think about that the next time you have to drive 3 miles for a gallon of milk.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Al Gore's Climate Change Speech




I was lucky enough to snag an invitation to see Al Gore's speech on climate change this past Thursday. The talk was organized by Mayor Nickel's office as part of a weeklong series of climate-related policy announcements, mostly focused on Nickel's U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement and the release of the City of Seattle's Green Ribbon Commission report. Gore was here to show support for the role Nickels and Seattle have taken in addressing climate change. I think Al did an amazing job. He was funny, passionate, enthusiastic, and inspiring.

I've been convinced that global warming is a major threat for years. However, I have to say that after seeing Gore's presentation, it feels like climate change will be THE defining issue facing our entire civilization for the next 100 years. It affects everything. The "tipping points" that he explained so brilliantly are what we really need to be concerned about, and I couldn't help but think that the way this problem is framed will determine whether or not we are successful in addressing it. I think Gore is dead-on to characterize climate change as a moral issue, and I also feel like all of us need to make a concerted effort to characterize it as a patriotic issue as well. Something like, "cutting out carbon is patriotic!"

Eric De Place has a great summary of the speech here.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Liam's Increasingly Multisyllabic Vocabulary

During Tuesday's Dad Patrol with Liam the boy was busting out some impressive words. Earlier in the day, when he was playing trains with Amy, he held up an unused section of track and declared "this one isn't NECESSARY." Later, when Liam and I were playing hide and seek, he said "I'm moving away from you--I'm DISAPPEARING." A couple of hours later I was reading a book to him about a turtle named Franklin. About midway through the book there's a picture of his friend Bear walking through the woods and carrying a basket full of berries. I pointed at the bear and asked Liam what the bear was doing. He said "He's picking blueberries. Are they EDIBLE?"

Liam is 2 1/2 years old. Is this normal? Either way, it's pretty fun to experience.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Museum of Flight





My brother Andy is leaving Packwood and moving back to Flagstaff, Arizona. He received a pretty hefty promotion (he'll be silviculturist on the Coconino NF) and he's psyched to be going back, so I am happy for him, but I am extremely bummed that he's leaving Washington. So he came up to Seattle for his last visit before the move, and we decided we'd have a "boys day out." We asked Liam what he wanted to do, and he chose the Museum of Flight. Liam had been there a few times before with Amy, but neither Andy nor I had, so we decided to go for it.

The curious thing about the Museum of Flight is the intensely strange juxtaposition of amazing technological breakthroughs and the cold-blooded purpose to which they were put. For example, in a single room, one can see an aircraft that was used to deliver mail to remote rural towns, another that could fly faster than any plane ever built that was used to spy on other countries, and yet another that was used to drop napalm on villages in Viet Nam. I was simultaneously impressed by the ingenious engineering and disgusted by the killing technology. After a couple of hours the psychic dissonance was too much for us to bear, so we left. Plus it was nap time.

Skagit Delta Snow Geese




As I mentioned in an earlier post, Amy's folks came out for her birthday a couple of weeks ago. In addition to lots of good conversation and play time with Mr. Little Guy, we also managed a trip up to the Skagit delta on a remarkably warm and sunny Saturday. Fortunately, the snow geese had not yet headed for their northern breeding grounds, and we had lots of good views of the feeding flocks on our way towards La Conner. After lunch, we drove back across Fir Island and came upon an enormous flock of snow geese feeding on the north side of the road. We watched them from the car for a few minutes, and then the fellow living in the house closest to the flock decided it was time to mow his lawn (!) and as soon as the mower started up, every single goose (there must have been 50,000 of them at least) decided it was time to take to the sky. It was absolutely overwhelming--I've never seen anything like it. If you're ever in northwest Washington in late winter/early spring, it is not to be missed.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

A Counterintuitive (and Depressing) Argument

This post is a couple of years old, but it certainly gave me pause when I stumbled across it earlier today. The take home message of the book (Rebel Sell) it references: "practices such as downshifting, energy conservation, eating organic produce, and engaging in local environmental activities are useless" and "you can't break the cycle of poverty; you can't break the cycle of violence; you can't break the cycle of corporate expansion; you can't break the cycle of the arms race; you can't break the cycle of imprisonment, if you don't break the cycle by which radicals are isolated, idealists are turned into pragmatists, and pragmatists into opportunists." The thing is, many of the arguments have merit. It's an interesting read, definitely worth a few minutes of your time.

Monday, March 13, 2006

Surprise Visit from the Kaplans


Amy's birthday was two weekends ago and her parents came out for a surprise visit. It was tough to find a way to keep Amy and Liam home the morning her parents were due to arrive, but I made up a story about ordering something that she needed to sign for. It worked pretty well, and she and Liam were both completely shocked to see her parents, and not the UPS guy. It was a great visit, especially for Liam. More pics of our trip to the Skagit in the next post.

Here's a shot of Amy, Linda, Dan, and Liam on the steps in Fremont near the ship canal.

Friday, March 10, 2006

Bike Station Seattle


I had some minor mechanical problems with my front brakes on Monday (mostly due to my mechanical ineptitude) so I took my bike to the Seattle Bike Station. I'd never been inside before, and I was pretty impressed by what I saw. In addition to housing secure, 24/7 bicycle parking, Bike Station is also home to the offices of the Bicycle Alliance of Washington and they have a full service repair shop in the back. On my way to see Joe (the mechanic) I passed Pauh Wang, the City of Seattle's liason to the Bicycle Advisory Board, who had also come in for a quick repair. Joe fixed up the Kona in about 15 minutes and he only charged me $5!

This is a great facility, and I think it would be even better if there were more of them in and around Seattle, located in areas of high employment density (another in downtown, closer to the Pike/Pine corridor & financial district would be good, UW, downtown Bellevue, Microsoft campus in Redmond, etc.). Something similar has been done in the San Francisco Bay area, with Bike Stations in Berkeley and the Embarcadero. Long Beach and Palo Alto also have Bike Stations.

Maybe we could use some of the State's budget surplus to fund more infrastructure for bicycle commuters?

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Calico, The Coolest Map-making Cat in Town


For the past several months one of my colleagues at CommEn Space, Tim Schaub, has been working on a series of improvements and modifications to the open source web mapping tool MapServer. We had a naming contest for the application and Calico was the winner. I don't get to do much graphic design at work, but occasionally an opportunity presents itself, and I designed this logo for Calico. Not sure how exactly we'll be using it, but I expect it will be gaining some visibility over the next few months, and pretty soon we'll be generating even more (non) profits! To see some examples of Calico applications we've made for our clients, go here.